What’s the point of social networking?

Often I’m asked, "Why do I want to sign up for a social network? Twitter? Or write a blog?" and for many the answer is, "Perhaps you shouldn’t. It might be too early for you."

For many of us, participating in social networks and using social media comes naturally. We have the gadgets and computers, fast Internet access and, most importantly, are connected with other people discovering and using these technologies. For many other people, there’s little or no point to participating since their real-world social networks aren’t yet leveraging these technologies or, like some people I know, they and their friends only use computers at work and a cell phone for talking.

I recall my now deceased grandmother, born in the early 1900′s, tell me about the introduction of the telephone to the farm she grew up on in rural South Dakota. At first there were party lines only and eventually they got a private line, but it was years before people accepted this device into their homes and became comfortable with the behavior changes required to use it. Even today, people that could truly use a free telephony service like Skype — and with someone around like me that could teach and handhold them all the way through the learning curve — are remarkably slow to adopt it even though they could see and talk to their loved ones on the other side of the world for free.

Social networking and social media are but baby steps along the way to significantly powerful, ubiquitous and pervasive Internet-centric human-to-human connections. They’re still messy and chaotic, but as more and more of us use them and point out where they fall down, the better they’ll become and the more of them that will be introduced.

This is one reason why this video tickled me as it humorously illustrates the sometimes bogus and false connections that social networking fosters and how many of us participating have only thin threads tying us together: